Apparatus for decomposing low concentration of volatile organic compounds by high flow

ABSTRACT

Disclosed is an apparatus for decomposing low-concentration volatile organic compounds, which includes: an adsorption unit configured to adsorb a volatile organic compound; a heated air supply unit configured to supply a heated air to the adsorption unit; an oxidation decomposing catalyst unit configured to decompose a volatile organic compound detached from the adsorption unit; and an ozone supply unit configured to supply an ozone to the oxidation decomposing catalyst unit. The apparatus may maximize an exchange cycle semi-permanently by adsorbing low-concentration VOC under a high-flow condition and then detaching VOC within a short time and also by recycling an adsorption filter. In addition, the apparatus may effectively decompose VOC substances detached by a low flow into carbon dioxide and water under a condition with most excellent oxidation decomposition efficiency by using an oxidation decomposing catalyst filter.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application claims priority to Korean Patent Application No.10-2015-0182575, filed on Dec. 21, 2015, and all the benefits accruingtherefrom under 35 U.S.C. §119, the contents of which in its entiretyare herein incorporated by reference.

BACKGROUND

1. Field

The present disclosure relates to an apparatus for decomposinglow-concentration volatile organic compounds.

2. Description of the Related Art

If an existing VOC treatment method is directly applied to indoorlow-concentration indoor volatile organic compound (hereinafter, VOC)sources which are extensively present, there are many technical andeconomic limits. In an existing adsorbing technique, in order to removeVOC substances, gaseous substances are adsorbed physically andchemically, which ensures rapid removal. However, since the adsorbedharmful substances are not easily removed and recycled, if a filter isused for a long time, a filter surface is saturated, and thus the filtermay not be used for a long time. In addition, an oxidation catalystmethod is a technique for removing harmful gas by means of oxidationdecomposing by using a metal catalyst, but the removal efficiency is lowat a low concentration.

Moreover, a low-flow air cleaning method treats harmful substancesaround a treatment device at which air circulates, but at corners whichare far from the device and thus suffer from air stagnation, air doesnot circulate well, and thus the concentration of contaminants is noteasily lowered.

RELATED ART

[Patent Literature] KR0623498 B1

SUMMARY

The present disclosure is designed to solve the above problems, and thepresent disclosure is directed to providing an apparatus, which mayextend an exchange cycle semi-permanently by recycling an adsorptionfilter and also prevent the process performance from being deteriorateddue to surface contamination of a catalyst. In addition, the presentdisclosure is directed to provide an apparatus for decomposinglow-concentration volatile organic compounds using adsorption andoxidation decomposing catalyst, which may smoothly circulate an indoorair by a high flow and enhance the contaminant treatment efficiency ofthe entire indoor space.

In one aspect, there is provided an apparatus for decomposinglow-concentration volatile organic compounds, which includes: anadsorption unit configured to adsorb a volatile organic compound; aheated air supply unit configured to supply a heated air to theadsorption unit; an oxidation decomposing catalyst unit configured todecompose a volatile organic compound detached from the adsorption unit;and an ozone supply unit configured to supply an ozone to the oxidationdecomposing catalyst unit.

The apparatus for decomposing low-concentration volatile organiccompounds (hereinafter, VOC) by a high flow according to an embodimentof the present disclosure may maximize an exchange cyclesemi-permanently by adsorbing low-concentration VOC under a high-flowcondition and then detaching VOC within a short time and also byrecycling an adsorption filter. In addition, the apparatus according toan embodiment of the present disclosure may effectively decompose VOCsubstances detached by a low flow into carbon dioxide and water under acondition with most excellent oxidation decomposition efficiency byusing an oxidation decomposing catalyst filter.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a diagram showing components of an apparatus for decomposinglow-concentration VOC by a high flow (hereinafter, also referred to as ahigh-flow decomposing apparatus) according to an embodiment of thepresent disclosure.

FIG. 2 is a diagram showing a heated air supply unit, an ozone supplyunit and a detaching fan of the high-flow decomposing apparatusaccording to an embodiment of the present disclosure.

FIG. 3 is a diagram briefly showing a process of adsorbing, detachingand decomposing volatile organic compounds by using the high-flowdecomposing apparatus according to an embodiment of the presentdisclosure.

FIG. 4 is a diagram showing an experiment device, configured forconducting an experiment for volatile organic compound decompositionefficiency.

FIG. 5 is a graph showing experiment results in relation to volatileorganic compound decomposition efficiency according to a space velocity.

FIG. 6 is a diagram showing a device for performing a detachmentexperiment according to a temperature of heated air.

FIG. 7 is a graph showing experiment results in relation todecomposition efficiency according to a detachment temperature.

FIG. 8 is a graph showing a detachment concentration of acetaldehydewhen the detachment temperature is kept consistently.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, there is provided anapparatus for decomposing low-concentration volatile organic compounds,which includes: an adsorption unit configured to adsorb a volatileorganic compound; a heated air supply unit configured to supply a heatedair to the adsorption unit; an oxidation decomposing catalyst unitconfigured to decompose a volatile organic compound detached from theadsorption unit; and an ozone supply unit configured to supply an ozoneto the oxidation decomposing catalyst unit.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the volatile organiccompound may be at least one selected from the group consisting offormaldehyde, acetaldehyde, toluene, benzene, ethyl benzene, xylene andstyrene.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the volatile organiccompound may be a low-concentration volatile organic compound of 500 ppmor below.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the volatile organiccompound may be detached from the adsorption unit by a low flow with aspace velocity of 30,000/hr or below.

In this specification, the space velocity is a concept obviouslyrecognized by those skilled in the art and may have a unit of hr⁻¹,which corresponds to Q (flow rate)/V (reaction catalyst volume), wherethe unit of the flow rate (Q) may be L/min and the unit of the catalystvolume (V) may be m³. However, the units of the flow rate and thecatalyst volume may be varied by those skilled in the art.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the apparatus may furtherinclude a catalyst protecting filter unit disposed at the front of theadsorption unit in series with the adsorption unit to protect a catalystby removing particle substances contained in the external air.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the catalyst protectingfilter unit may include a prefilter or a microfiber filter.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the adsorption unit mayinclude an adsorbent selected from the group consisting of zeolite,alumina-based adsorbent, silica-based adsorbent, and activated carbon.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the alumina-based adsorbentmay employ any absorbent which may be easily used by those skilled inthe art, without any limitation, and may be, for example, activatedalumina.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the silica-based adsorbentmay employ any absorbent which may be easily used by those skilled inthe art, without any limitation, and may be, for example, silica gel.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the apparatus may furtherinclude an introduction unit provided at a front end thereof tointroduce an external air containing a low-concentration volatileorganic compound into the apparatus.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the apparatus may furtherinclude a circulation fan configured to introduce an external air intothe apparatus and discharge a clean air free from the volatile organiccompound so that air consistently circulates by a high flow. In detail,the high-flow circulated by the circulation fan may have a high flowwith a space velocity of 100,000/hr or above, 200,000/hr or above,300,000/hr or above, or 500,000/hr or above.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the apparatus may furtherinclude a detaching fan configured to transmit the external air to theheated air supply unit and the ozone supply unit.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the heated air supply unitmay further include an air heating unit for heating the air.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the heated air supply unitmay supply an air heated to 40° C. to 70° C. by the air heating unit tothe adsorption unit. In detail, in an embodiment of the presentdisclosure, the air supplied to the adsorption unit by the air heatingunit may have a temperature of 30° C. or above, 40° C. or above, 50° C.or above, 60° C. or above, 70° C. or above, 80° C. or above, 90° C. orabove, or 100° C. or below, 90° C. or below, 80° C. or below, 70° C. orbelow, 60° C. or below, 50° C. or below, 40° C. or below, or 30° C. orbelow, without being limited thereto. In addition, in an embodiment ofthe present disclosure, the air heating unit for heating an external airmay have a temperature of 80° C. to 120° C.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the detaching fan maytransmit the external air to the heated air supply unit and the ozonesupply unit by a low flow.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the external air transmittedto the heated air supply unit and the ozone supply unit by the detachingfan may have a flow with a space velocity of 1,500/hr to 30,000/hr. Indetail, in an embodiment of the present disclosure, the external airtransmitted to the heated air supply unit and the ozone supply unit bythe detaching fan may have a flow with a space velocity of 150/hr orabove, 1,500/hr or above, 2,000/hr or above, 3,000/hr or above, 5,000/hror above, 7,000/hr or above, 10,000/hr or above, 15,000/hr or above,20,000/hr or above, 25,000/hr or above, 30,000/hr or above, 35,000/hr orabove, 40,000/hr or above, or 50,000/hr or below, 40,000/hr or below,35,000/hr or below, 30,000/hr or below, 25,000/hr or below, 20,000/hr orbelow, 15,000/hr or below, 10,000/hr or below, 7,000/hr or below,5,000/hr or below, 3,000/hr or below, 2,000/hr or below, 1,500/hr orbelow or 150/hr or below, without being limited thereto.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the circulation fan may be ahigh-flow circulation fan for circulating air by a high flow.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the detaching fan may beoperated during a time band when a lot of volatile organic compounds aregenerated, for example for 1 to 2 hours from midnight to 7 a.m., totransmit the external air to the heated air supply unit and the ozonesupply unit, without being limited thereto.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the circulation fan may beoperated during a time band when volatile organic compounds aregenerated less, for example from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m., to adsorb a volatileorganic compound to the adsorption layer, without being limited thereto.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the detaching fan and thecirculation fan may be operated at different time bands.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the air circulated by thecirculation fan may have a flow with a space velocity of 100,000/hr to500,000/hr. In detail, in an embodiment of the present disclosure, theair circulated by the circulation fan may have a flow with a spacevelocity of 100,000/hr or above, 200,000/hr or above, 250,000/hr orabove, 300,000/hr or above, 350,000/hr or above, 400,000/hr or above,450,000/hr or above, 500,000/hr or above, 550,000/hr or above,600,000/hr or above 700,000/hr or above, 1,000,000/hr or above, or1,500,000/hr or below, 1,000,000/hr or below, 700,000/hr or below,600,000/hr or below, 550,000/hr or below, 500,000/hr or below,450,000/hr or below, 400,000/hr or below, 350,000/hr or below,300,000/hr or below, 250,000/hr or below, 200,000/hr or below, or100,000/hr or below, without being limited thereto.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the oxidation decomposingcatalyst unit may include an oxidation decomposing catalyst, and theoxidation decomposing catalyst may be at least one selected from thegroup consisting of MnO₂, NiO, CoO, Fe₂O₃, V₂O₅, and AgO₂.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the oxidation decomposingcatalyst unit may include a honeycomb supported by a manganese-titaniacatalyst.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the oxidation decomposingcatalyst unit may allow the ozone supplied from the ozone supply unit toreact with an oxidation decomposing catalyst to generate an oxygen atom(O*) in an activated state or an activated oxygen molecule, by whichvolatile organic substances are decomposed.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, there is also provided amethod for decomposing low-concentration volatile organic compounds,comprising: adsorbing a low-concentration volatile organic compound toan adsorbent by a high flow with a space velocity of 100,000/hr orabove; detaching the adsorbed volatile organic compound from theadsorbent by a low flow with a space velocity of 30,000/hr or below bysupplying a heated air, and recycling the adsorbent; generating anoxygen atom (O*) in an activated state or an activated oxygen moleculeby supplying an ozone to react with the oxidation decomposing catalyst;and decomposing the volatile organic compound by reacting the detachedvolatile organic compound with the generated activated oxygen.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the adsorbing step may beperformed during a time band when a lot of volatile organic compoundsare generated, for example from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m., without being limitedthereto.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the detaching step, theactivated oxygen generating step and the decomposing step may beperformed during a time band when volatile organic compounds aregenerated less, for example for 1 to 2 hours from midnight to 7 a.m.,without being limited thereto.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the adsorbing step may beperformed at a time band different from the detaching step, theactivated oxygen generating step and the decomposing step.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the adsorbing step may be aprimary decomposing step in which the volatile organic compound isphysically decomposed, and the decomposing step may be a secondarydecomposing step in which the volatile organic compound is chemicallydecomposed. The primary decomposing step and the secondary decomposingstep may be performed at different time bands. For example, the primarydecomposing step may be performed at day time when a lot of volatileorganic compounds are generated, and the secondary decomposing step maybe performed at night time when volatile organic compounds are generatedless.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the adsorbing step may havea flow with a space velocity of 100,000/hr to 500,000/hr. In detail, inan embodiment of the present disclosure, the flow of the adsorbing stepmay be identical to the flow of air circulated by the circulation fan.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the method may furtherinclude filtering particle substances in the air, before the adsorbingstep. In detail, the filtering step may be performed by a prefilter or amicrofiber filter.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the method may be performedby introducing an external air by a high flow and discharging a cleanedair free from the volatile organic compound to consistently circulatethe air.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the heated air and the ozonemay be supplied by transmitting a low-flow external air.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the flow in the adsorbingstep may be 8 to 15 times, preferably 9 to 12 times, more preferably 10times or more, in comparison to the flow of the external air transmittedfor supplying the heated air and the ozone.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the external air may have aflow with a space velocity of 1,500/hr to 30,000/hr. In detail, the flowof the external air may be identical to the flow of the external airtransmitted to the heated air supply unit and the ozone supply unit bythe detaching fan.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the heated air may have atemperature of 40° C. to 70° C. In detail, the temperature of the heatedair may be identical to the temperature of air supplied to theadsorption unit.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the method may furtherinclude discharging the cleaned air, after the decomposing step.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, in the adsorbing step, thevolatile organic compound may be primarily treated in a physical way,and in the decomposing step, the volatile organic compound may besecondarily treated in a chemical way.

In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the method may use theapparatus according to an embodiment of the present disclosure.

The apparatus according to an embodiment of the present disclosure isillustrated in FIG. 1 in detail. Referring to FIG. 1, an external airprimarily passes through the catalyst protecting filter unit and theadsorption unit by the circulation fan and is discharged out as a cleanair free from the volatile organic compound. The catalyst protectingfilter unit may play a role of improving durability of the adsorptionunit and the oxidation decomposing catalyst unit by removing particlesubstances contained in the external air. The volatile organic compoundcontained in the external air is primarily removed by the adsorptionunit. This adsorbing process may be intensively performed during a timeband when a lot of volatile organic compounds are generated.

After the volatile organic compound is adsorbed, the apparatus accordingto an embodiment of the present disclosure may perform a process ofdetaching the volatile organic compound and recycling the adsorptionunit and a process of decomposing the detached volatile organic compoundat the oxidation decomposing catalyst unit, as shown in FIGS. 2 and 3.This detachment/recycling and oxidation decomposing process may beintensively performed during a time band when volatile organic compoundsare generated less, and through this process, the volatile organiccompound may be secondarily removed. Therefore, if the apparatusaccording to an embodiment of the present disclosure is used, thevolatile organic compound may be effectively removed by primarilyremoving volatile organic compounds in the air in a physical way andthen secondarily removing volatile organic compounds in a chemical way.

In detail, referring to FIG. 2, the detaching fan transmits the externalair to the heated air supply unit and the ozone supply unit by a lowflow, and the heated air supply unit heats the air and supplies theheated air to the adsorption unit. Also, the ozone supply unit suppliesozone to the oxidation decomposing catalyst unit. Such supplyingprocesses are performed by a low flow. Also, referring to FIG. 3, at theadsorption unit, the volatile organic compound is detached due to theheated air supplied to the adsorption unit, and the detached volatileorganic compound is supplied to the oxidation decomposing catalyst unit.Also, the volatile organic compound is composed by an oxygen atom (O*)in an activated state or an activated oxygen molecule at the oxidationdecomposing catalyst unit. As a result, the volatile organic compoundadsorbed to the adsorption unit is chemically decomposed and dischargedout of the apparatus as a clean air, and due to the detached volatileorganic compound, the adsorption unit is recycled again into a statecapable of adsorbing a volatile organic compound.

In the apparatus according to an embodiment of the present disclosure,the volatile organic compound adsorbing process and the volatile organiccompound decomposing process are performed separately. In a generalindoor air, low-concentration volatile organic compounds are mainlypresent, and in order to treat such low-concentration volatile organiccompounds by a catalyst decomposing apparatus, a significant high-flowtreatment apparatus is required. However, as in the results ofExperimental Example 1, under a high-flow condition, it is difficult togive a sufficient residence time at the oxidation catalyst, and thus thedecomposition performance is lowered. For this reason, an adsorbingprocess for removing harmful substances under a high-flow condition anda process for decomposing harmful substances with an oxidation catalystunder a low-flow condition are separated, so that (1) alow-concentration indoor volatile organic compound is adsorbed under ahigh-flow condition, (2) after a certain time, the volatile organiccompound adsorbed to the adsorbent is detached under a low-flowcondition, (3) and the detached volatile organic compound is supplied tothe oxidation catalyst unit under a low-flow condition. In this way, theprocesses for effectively oxidizing and decomposing a volatile organiccompound are combined, and thus the indoor volatile organic compound maybe effectively treated.

Hereinafter, the configuration and effects of the present disclosurewill be described in more detail on the basis of experimental examplesas follows. However, these experimental examples are just for betterunderstanding of the present disclosure, and the scope of the presentdisclosure is not limited thereto.

[Experimental Example 1] Experiment for Checking Volatile OrganicCompound Treatment Efficiency in a Low-Flow Detachment Process

In the apparatus according to an embodiment of the present disclosure,the volatile organic compound treatment efficiency when a volatileorganic compound is detached and decomposed by a low flow was comparedwith the case where a volatile organic compound is detached anddecomposed by a high flow, through an experiment.

By using a device shown in the diagram of FIG. 4, air including 10 ppmof acetaldehyde serving as a volatile organic compound was consistentlyput, and ozone was consistently supplied at a concentration of 25 ppm.In addition, a manganese-titania catalyst was used as the oxidationdecomposing catalyst, and the reaction catalyst had a volume of1.257×10⁻⁵.

In detail, a cylindrical device as shown in FIG. 4 was used, and thisdevice had an inner diameter of 4 cm and a height of 22 cm. Aircontaining acetaldehyde, ozone and nitrogen was injected into an inletof the device provided at one side thereof, and a concentration ofacetaldehyde and ozone discharged through an outlet at the other sidewas measured using an infrared spectrometer. At this time, the catalystunit used a cylindrical catalyst having a diameter of 4 cm and a heightof 1 cm.

A chemical formula for decomposing ozone at the catalyst is as follows.

[Reaction Formula 1]

O₃->O₂*+O*  (1)

O₃+O*->O₂*+O₂  (2)

In addition, a reaction formula of the generated activated oxygen (O₂*)acetaldehyde is as follows.

[Reaction Formula 2]

CH₃CHO+2.5 O₂*->2 CO₂+2 H₂O

By using the above mechanism, the apparatus according to an embodimentof the present disclosure decomposes a volatile organic compound intocarbon dioxide and water, not harmful to a human body.

Regarding the amount of air put into the device, in order to vary theflow for detachment, acetaldehyde was supplied while setting a spacevelocity (SV) to about 10,000 hr⁻¹, 30,000 hr⁻¹, 50,000 hr⁻¹, 75,000hr⁻¹, 100,000 hr⁻¹, and 150,000 hr⁻¹. After acetaldehyde passed throughthe catalyst unit including an oxidation decomposing catalyst, aconcentration of acetaldehyde was measured in real time using aninfrared spectrometer (FT-IR Spectrometer) (Model: MIDAC Model I-4001(USA), this infrared spectrometer was used in all experiments below),and a reduction rate of the concentration of acetaldehyde in comparisonto an initial concentration, namely 10 ppm, was calculated in apercentage. The results are shown in FIG. 5.

The acetaldehyde treatment efficiency was calculated using an equation“100*(initial concentration−final concentration)/initial concentration”.

The space velocity (hr⁻¹) corresponds to Q (flow rate)/V (reactioncatalyst volume), and at this time, the unit of the flow rate (Q) isL/min, and the unit of the catalyst volume (V) is m³.

In detail, conditions of the air, the catalyst and the space velocity inthe experiment are as in Table 1 below.

TABLE 1 reaction catalyst reaction gas (TFR) diameter height volumespace velocity flow rate (LPM) (m) (m) (m³) (/hr) 2.15 0.04 0.01 1.257 ×10⁻⁵ 10,265 6.28 29,985 10.47 49,990 15.75 75,200 20.95 100,029 31.32149,542 *LPM = liter per minute TFR = Q1 + Q2 + Q3 in FIG. 4

According to FIG. 5, it may be found that if the space velocity is30,000 hr⁻¹ or below, substantially 100% of acetaldehyde is decomposed,but if the space velocity is 50,000 hr¹ or above, the treatmentefficiency deteriorates to 50% or below. In detail, if the spacevelocity is 50,000 hr⁻¹, the treatment efficiency is 50%, and if thespace velocity is 75,000 hr⁻¹, the treatment efficiency is 37%. Also, ifthe space velocity is 100,000 hr⁻¹, the treatment efficiency is 33%, andif the space velocity is 150,000 hr⁻¹, the treatment efficiency is 42%.

Therefore, according to the above experiment results, a volatile organiccompound adsorbed by a high flow may be detached by a low flow andchemically decomposed by the apparatus according to an embodiment of thepresent disclosure, and its decomposition efficiency is remarkably highin comparison to a case where the volatile organic compound is detachedby a high flow.

[Experimental Example 2] Experiment for Checking Detachment Efficiencyand Decomposition Efficiency According to a Temperature of the HeatedAir Supplied by the Heated Air Supply Unit

In order to check volatile organic compound detachment efficiency anddecomposition efficiency according to a temperature of the heated airsupplied for detaching the adsorbed volatile organic compound, thefollowing experiment was performed.

The experiment was performed using a device as shown in FIG. 6.

In detail, as a bed-type experiment device filled with an adsorbent, thedevice as shown in FIG. 6 was used, and a concentration of acetaldehydedetached at a certain temperature was measured using an infraredspectrometer. As the adsorbent, zeolite (CBV-720, SiO₂/Al₂O=30,purchased from ZEOLYST) was used. A nitrogen gas put for detachment hada detachment flow of 1 LPM, and the adsorbent had a volume of 0.23 cm³(with a diameter 1 cm and a height of 3 cm). Also, the put nitrogen gashad a space velocity of 25,000/hr. The nitrogen gas was put using a massflow controller (M.F.C).

First, an acetaldehyde gas was adsorbed to an adsorbent with at aconstant concentration of 10 ppm for 30 minutes, and a concentration ofdetached acetaldehyde was measured while adjusting a temperature of anelectric furnace. The nitrogen gas was supplied using a mass flowcontroller while adjusting the temperature to 30° C., 50° C., 75° C.,100° C., and 150° C., respectively, and in each case, a concentration ofacetaldehyde detached from the adsorption unit was measured using aninfrared spectrometer. Based on the measurement results, theacetaldehyde detachment efficiency was calculated, as shown in FIG. 7.In addition, at a temperature of 60° C., an amount of detachedacetaldehyde according time was measured. The measurement result isdepicted in FIG. 8.

The acetaldehyde detachment efficiency was calculated using a followingequation.

$\begin{matrix}{{{Detachment\_ Efficiency}(\%)} = \frac{\begin{matrix}{Detached\_ Amount} \\\left( {{Detachment\_ Concentration} \times {Detachment\_ time}} \right)\end{matrix}\mspace{14mu}}{\begin{matrix}{Adsorbed\_ Amount} \\\left( {{Adsorpion\_ Concentration} \times {Adsorpion\_ time}} \right)\end{matrix}}} & \lbrack{Equation}\rbrack\end{matrix}$

In FIG. 7, the detached amount corresponds to an area below the line inthe graph. The detached amount was measured by calculating the area bymeans of Gaussian fitting method.

According to the result of FIG. 7, it may be found that at 30° C. whichis a normal temperature condition, detachment does substantially notoccur, but the temperature rises to 50° C. to 75° C., the detachmentefficiency increases. In addition, it may be found that at 150° C., 100%detachment is performed. In particular, if the heated air is supplied ata temperature of 50° C. to 70° C., the concentration of acetaldehyde isin the level of 10 ppm, and this corresponds to the most efficientconcentration when the apparatus according to an embodiment of thepresent disclosure detaches a volatile organic compound by a low flowaccording to Experimental Example 1.

According to the result of FIG. 8, it may be found that when detachmentis performed at 60° C., the concentration of detached acetaldehydeclosely reaches 10 ppm, which is most desirable. Also, the time requiredfor reaching the level is 10 minutes to 20 minutes, which reveals thatthe volatile organic compound may be efficiently decomposed.

REFERENCE SYMBOLS

-   -   10: apparatus for decomposing low-concentration volatile organic        compounds    -   20: catalyst protecting filter unit    -   30: adsorption unit    -   40: oxidation decomposing catalyst unit    -   50: circulation fan    -   60: ozone generation unit    -   70: heated air supply unit    -   71: air heating unit    -   80: detaching fan

What is claimed is:
 1. An apparatus for decomposing low-concentrationvolatile organic compounds, comprising: an adsorption unit configured toadsorb a volatile organic compound; a heated air supply unit configuredto supply a heated air to the adsorption unit; an oxidation decomposingcatalyst unit configured to decompose a volatile organic compounddetached from the adsorption unit by a low flow with a space velocity of30,000/hr or below; an ozone supply unit configured to supply an ozoneto the oxidation decomposing catalyst unit; and a high-flow circulationfan configured to introduce an external air into the apparatus anddischarge a clean air free from the volatile organic compound so thatair consistently circulates by a high flow with a space velocity of100,000/hr or above.
 2. The apparatus for decomposing low-concentrationvolatile organic compounds according to claim 1, further comprising: acatalyst protecting filter unit disposed at the front of the adsorptionunit in series with the adsorption unit to protect a catalyst byremoving particle substances contained in the external air.
 3. Theapparatus for decomposing low-concentration volatile organic compoundsaccording to claim 2, wherein the catalyst protecting filter unitincludes a prefilter or a microfiber filter.
 4. The apparatus fordecomposing low-concentration volatile organic compounds according toclaim 1, wherein the adsorption unit includes an adsorbent selected fromthe group consisting of zeolite, alumina-based adsorbent, silica-basedadsorbent, and activated carbon.
 5. The apparatus for decomposinglow-concentration volatile organic compounds according to claim 1,wherein the heated air supply unit supplies an air of 40° C. to 70° C.to the adsorption unit.
 6. The apparatus for decomposinglow-concentration volatile organic compounds according to claim 1,further comprising: a detaching fan configured to transmit the externalair to the heated air supply unit and the ozone supply unit.
 7. Theapparatus for decomposing low-concentration volatile organic compoundsaccording to claim 6, wherein the detaching fan transmits the externalair to the heated air supply unit and the ozone supply unit by a lowflow.
 8. The apparatus for decomposing low-concentration volatileorganic compounds according to claim 7, wherein the external air has aflow with a space velocity of 1,500/hr to 30,000/hr.
 9. The apparatusfor decomposing low-concentration volatile organic compounds accordingto claim 6, wherein the detaching fan is operated for 1 to 2 hours frommidnight to 7 a.m. to transmit the external air to the heated air supplyunit and the ozone supply unit, and the circulation fan is operated from8 a.m. to 11 p.m. to adsorb a volatile organic compound to theadsorption layer, different from the detaching fan.
 10. The apparatusfor decomposing low-concentration volatile organic compounds accordingto claim 1, wherein the air circulated by the circulation fan has a flowwith a space velocity of 100,000/hr to 500,000/hr.
 11. The apparatus fordecomposing low-concentration volatile organic compounds according toclaim 1, wherein the oxidation decomposing catalyst unit includes anoxidation decomposing catalyst, and the oxidation decomposing catalystis at least one selected from the group consisting of MnO₂, NiO, CoO,Fe₂O₃, V₂O₅, and AgO₂.
 12. The apparatus for decomposinglow-concentration volatile organic compounds according to claim 11,wherein the oxidation decomposing catalyst unit includes a honeycombsupported by a manganese-titania catalyst.
 13. The apparatus fordecomposing low-concentration volatile organic compounds according toclaim 1, wherein the oxidation decomposing catalyst unit allows theozone supplied from the ozone supply unit to react with an oxidationdecomposing catalyst to generate an oxygen atom (O*) in an activatedstate or an activated oxygen molecule, by which volatile organicsubstances are decomposed.